 I'm delighted to be here with the Borough President, Councilman Jomari Williams and Councilman Richie. These are the guys who, when the City Council play an active role, leadership role, in terms of the fight for equality, decent, affordable housing in the city of New York. And Mr. President, thank you very much for that you're trying to do. Look, here's the bottom line. This is the wealthiest country in the history of the world. People should not be forced to live in dilapidated housing where elevators break down and elderly people have to walk eight flights up or down to go and get some groceries. Unemployment for children should not be 50 or 60 percent and then we're shocked to find out that kids get involved in crime. Community health centers should not be locked up because municipalities in New York and elsewhere do not have the capability of providing recreation to kids after schools. What this campaign is about is transforming our national priorities, not spending trillions of dollars on wars we should not get into, not spending billions of dollars on tax breaks for the 1 percent. What this campaign is about is transforming our national priorities, rebuilding our infrastructure and when we talk about rebuilding our infrastructure that means rebuilding housing projects like this, not only here in New York, but all over this country. It means giving the children of America quality education in decent high-tech schools all over this country. So I'm just delighted to be here with these elected representatives and congratulate them for the very, very difficult work that they are undertaking. So, I talked to one resident who said they probably this is the solicitation. I know. Well, no matter what you do, I mean no matter what you do, if I wasn't here then people would say, why didn't you show up? Well, yesterday or may know I was in Rome and the day before that I was someplace else and we have a rally. The point is I can understand the cynicism. Believe me, I can understand the cynicism. My understanding is not too many presidential candidates have come to Brownsville. I understand that maybe I'm the first one. Exactly never. Exactly never. So that's a start. But if you check everything that I've been talking about, every speech that I've been given, it is the need to transform our national priorities. It is the need to say that it is absurd that in this country 35 percent of African-American children are living in poverty. And what this campaign is about, what a sand is, administration is about is working with these guys to transform our national priorities. And by the way, when you rebuild the lapidated housing, you know what else you do? You start creating jobs that we desperately need. Senator, how exactly as president would you help prioritize communities like these? Well, federal government puts money into this type of housing. You can't abandon that housing. You can't build housing and then say good luck in trying to maintain it. But bottom line here again, this is the wealthiest country in the history of the world. We are a poor country that can't afford to maintain public housing. I don't think so. And that means transforming our tax system. That means saying to corporate America and the wealthiest people in this country, yeah, you're going to have to start paying your fair share so these children can have a future in which they can thrive it.